Reading the story shows that apparently the two cyclists were responsible for their own deaths. Maybe later information will show that's incorrect, but that's the only information Streetsblog and its readers had.

The implication of Streetsblog's interpretation: Whenever a cyclist dies in a traffic accident, he/she is by definition a "victim."

I've written before about Streetsblog's grotesque traffic war assumption.

In an account of the accident that injured the guy pictured above, after recounting other cycling accidents, Streetsblog offers some advice:

So where does this leave cyclists? It’s a pretty grim situation that screams that cyclists simply must have video cameras lashed onto their bikes and helmets. Depending on luck isn’t a good strategy. Streetsblog readers will recall the case of Tim Doyle, who was riding in the bike lane when an SFPD cruiser jinked into it, putting him in the hospital. Imagine how that would have played out if not for a good Samaritan motorist with a dash cam? [Attorney Michael]Stephenson also recommends that cyclists, if they are hit, make sure to collect and save evidence (Are San Francisco Cyclists Guilty Until Proven Innocent?).

Yes, cyclists can mount cameras on their bikes and gather evidence after they are in an accident, but after you are hit is often too late.

The idea is not to be hit or have a fall in the first place. A realistic sense of that danger means you shouldn't ride a bike. It's an intrinsically unsafe way to get around. Don't do it! Don't be another "victim" in a Streetsblog story!

And the danger is not all about motor vehicles. Most cycling accidents are solo falls that don't involve other vehicles.

How the left elected George W. Bush

...[In 2000]Nader was unconcerned about the prospect of throwing the election to George W. Bush by siphoning votes from Gore. The week after the Madison Square Garden rally, Nader spoke to an overflow crowd at Chapman University in Orange, California, where he implied that Bush would be better for the left than Gore. “If it were a choice between a provocateur and an ‘anesthetizer,’ I’d rather have a provocateur,” he said. “It would mobilize us.”

The next eight years put this proposition to the test. Nader told me that the 2000 election “showed the pundits that, together with our votes and Gore’s votes, we had a majority progressive turnout.”

Perhaps it did, but without winning office, the display of a progressive majority counted for nothing. Bush won, beating Gore by 537 votes in Florida, a state where 97,421 voted for Nader. (Nader’s enormous rallies didn’t translate into impressive turnout, and the Greens garnered only 2.7 percent of the national vote.)

Bush was certainly a provocateur, governing from the far right despite lacking a mandate, but there was no countervailing Green mobilization. After the election, the movement Nader had been building—the one that seemed so alive that night at Madison Square Garden—completely dissipated...See also Stupidity on the left.